Washington's
Copy of
Rules of Civility & Decent Behaviour
In Company and Conversation
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Introduction | Transcription
| Original | Editorial Apparatus
The following policy statement is taken from the front
matter of The Papers of George Washington, published by the
University Press of Virginia.
Transcription of the documents in the volumes of The Papers of George
Washington has remained as close to a literal reproduction of the
manuscript as possible. Punctuation, capitalization, paragraphing, and
spelling of all words are retained as they appear in the original document.
Dashes used as punctuation have been retained except when a period and
a dash appear together at the end of a sentence. The appropriate marks
of punctuation have always been added at the end of a paragraph. Errors
in spelling of proper names and geographic locations have been corrected
in brackets or in annotation only if the spelling in the text makes the
word incomprehensible. When a tilde is used in the manuscript to indicate
a double letter, the letter has been silently doubled. Washington and
some of his correspondents occasionally used a tilde above an incorrectly
spelled word to indicate an error in orthography. When this device is
used the editors have silently corrected the word. In cases where a tilde
has been inserted above an abbreviation or contraction, usually in letter-book
copies, the word has been expanded. Otherwise, contractions and abbreviations
have been retained as written and a period has been inserted after an
abbreviation. When an apostrophe has been used in a contraction it is
retained. Superscripts have been lowered and if the word is an abbreviation
a period has been added. If the meaning of an abbreviation or contraction
is not obvious, it has been expanded in square brackets: "H[is] M[ajest]y."
Editorial insertions or corrections in the text also appear in square
brackets. Angle brackets < > are used to indicate illegible
or mutilated material. A space left blank in a manuscript by the writer
is indicated by a square- bracketed gap in the text [ ]. Deletions from
manuscripts are not indicated. If a deletion contains substantive material,
it appears in a footnote. If the intended location of marginal notations
is clear from the text, they are inserted without comment; otherwise they
are recorded in the footnotes. The ampersand has been retained and the
thorn transcribed as "th." The symbol for per ($PR) is used when it appears
in the manuscript. The dateline has been placed at the head of a document
regardless of where it occurred in the manuscript.
Since GW read no language other than English, incoming letters written
to him in foreign languages were generally translated for his information.
Where this contemporary translation has survived, it has been used as
the text of the document. If there is no contemporary
translation, the document in its original language has been used as the
text. The omitted documents are listed
in the appendix to this volume.
Introduction | Transcription
| Original | Editorial Apparatus
|